The Ancient Technology of RSS

And February Rabbit Holes

A vintage engraving style illustration of a dusty green rabbit jumping over typewriter text that reads, down the rabbit hole

How have you been?

Since taking my foot off the gas here at Substack I’ve freed up a lot of time and creative energy. If you’re feeling pressure to post weekly it’s worth asking yourself what your intentions are. If it’s all about growth there’s no doubt there is a benefit to posting weekly.

But if you’re looking holistically at your creative ecosystem there may be another rhythm that’s better for you.

Ornate illustration of Tree of Life in a stone building surronded by three leaf vines entwined in a border.

The time that I didn’t spend writing newsletters I’ve been…

  • Reading Norse poetry.1

  • Baking sourdough bread.

  • Studying The Wheel of Time from a craft perspective.

  • Trying out a new note taking platform called Obsidian.2

  • Working on my anthology project.

  • Curating my feed (and subsequently reading more Substacks.)

As an elder of the internet, I’d like to take a moment to point out the ancient technology of an RSS feed.

An RSS feed is a chronological, non-algorithmic feed of what you choose to add.

It is basically the holy grail of the internet.

But we left it behind in favor of the siren song of social media.

Before socials, if you wanted to follow updates from multiple sources, you used an RSS reader. Every blog and podcast has an RSS feed (even Substack.)

It’s baked into the DNA of the internet.

What I’ve done is moved most of my Substack reading to a free RSS reader called Feedly.

Most RSS feeds will automatically pull the post and strip away the formatting – meaning you don’t see certain Substack features like embedded posts. I have my Feedly set to open all posts in the web browser. (Here’s how.) This also makes it easy to comment or share. There are lots of ways to show love to posts without subscribing.

My actual subs are now the newsletters I read pretty much every time. The ones I don’t want to miss. If I have time to read more I can pop over to Feedly to see what’s new or to check certain categories like Food or Art.3

I’m also testing out the app again since learning this…


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in the studio

I haven’t done much art making recently because I’ve been focusing on curation projects (like & Entwined.) But I have submitted a poem to Motherlore magazine and am preparing works for Painting at Night and Mothering.

I’ve also been doing a lot of journaling and research for my fiction novel. I’ve started writing at my antique secretary instead of the couch and it’s been a lovely change (I’m writing at it now.) Davy has finally reached a stage where he’s happy to play LEGO beside me while I write and it’s a game changer!

https://instagram.com/p/C2lPXE8sZrr/


of shoes and ships and sealing wax

Other bits and bobs I’d like to recommend this week.

Read

My favorite new sub is . It reminds me of old days of the internet. Just because social media wants us all to yell over each other and be content machines doesn’t mean we have to comply. This post is a great place to start.

SOCIAL MEDIA ESCAPE CLUB
Self promotion can be easy breezy
Tara McMullin wrote a great piece about self-promotion, which you should read. I posted something on Substack Notes about the subject, and since it resonated so well (hello, new subscribers), I figured I’d share it again…
Read more

If you’re neurodivergent I can’t recommend this post by enough. This sounds deceptively simple, but if you struggle to make time for the things you love this process can be revolutionary.

Looking back this is how I climbed out of a very dark place in 2020 to where I am now.

Curiosity Spot
Moving from Burnout to Balance
Historically, most therapy training has been based on neurotypical to neurotypical interactions. When I trained I don’t think neurodivergence was mentioned at all and we only touched on privilege and intersectional identities. I already had a fair bit of knowledge, from working as a disability practitioner and my years as a serial student (because neuro…
Read more

I also enjoyed this piece by using sensory overload as a lens to view work stress.

Sometimes we need to reduce the number of layers.

What Works
Too Many Layers
Work in a way that builds you up instead of breaking you down. If you’re trying to work in a more sustainable way but find yourself backsliding into old habits, it’s time to Rethink Work. Join me for this new cohort-based course! A few months ago, Sean and I were driving through a particularly accu…
Read more

Here is a wonderful piece about book writing from .

Every creator works differently and I love hearing specifics about process.

The Clearing by Katherine May
How I start a new book
Hello, I appear to have started writing my next book. I realise that I should have done this quite some time ago, but life – and other projects – got in the way. In all honesty, it’s hard to truly account for the time, and I’d rather not think about it too hard. I’m quite easily distracted. At least I’ve finally got round to it…
Read more

Watch

Font and design nerds this is worth opening Instagram for.

https://instagram.com/p/C2cZBIAr24m/

Also, this whole feed of embroidered books.

https://instagram.com/p/C2kk7OcOq8t/

https://instagram.com/p/C1KnClhOjN2/

Listen

Another process chat from .

What comes first? The idea or the material?

Pencil Pals
Dear Helen, I don’t really know your work or care much what you do
I’ll get back to that title 👆 later, in the meantime my pal Naomi Tippingsent me a brilliant question: What comes first: the idea then the materials, or the materials and then the idea? I used to say no to all dissertation questions, I got so many. Or sometimes the student got the approach all wrong and turned me into a furious, ranting mess for the day 🤬…
Read more

Play

We played a lot of Dreamlight Valley over the holidays. If you’re a Disney nerd and you like cozy games (where you harvest plants, craft, and collect things) this game is for you. I don’t know why I find this type of game play so regulating, but I just do. Here are some selfies!

Myself as Eilonwy with red hair, overalls and Mickey ears in Dreamlight Valley with Belle reading a book behind
Me again with the Beast in Dreamlight Valley

One Year Ago

This time last year I was reflecting on a year long creative collaboration with . Instagram brought us together and I’m so thankful for it.

Last Week

In case you missed it, my last post explored my experience submitting work to various opportunities and exhibiting art for the first time.


This is an indie passion project! Here are some of the ways you can support me.

  1. Leave a comment. (This one’s my favorite. And it’s free!)

  2. Share this post.

  3. Sign up for Self Publishing 101.

  4. Subscribe or submit work toNeurokind.

  5. Read my book! (Curious what I mean by creative ecosystem? Start here.)

Let’s discuss.

  • How do you manage your Substack reading queue?

  • Are you an internet elder? What do you miss about the old magic?

  • What does your creative ecosystem need right now?

Cheers,

Sarah's signature with a big swoopy S
1

Specifically listening to the audiobook of this version (affiliate link) whilst reading along in hardcover and taking notes. I’m researching the Norns (Norse Fates) and Yggdrasil (Norse Tree of Life) for a fantasy novel I’m working on.

2

You can scroll down to the bottom of this post for a little update about how I’m integrating Obsidian into my hybrid (analogue / digital) note taking practice.

3

Actually if Substack created categories we could have one called “Favorites” and it would solve a lot of our overwhelm I think.

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